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Abstract
Objective
This
study sought to explore the perceived influence of narrative medicine
training on clinical skill development of fourth-year medical students,
focusing on competencies mandated by ACGME and the RCPSC in areas of
communication, collaboration, and professionalism.
Methods
Using
grounded-theory, three methods of data collection were used to query
twelve medical students participating in a one-month narrative medicine
elective regarding the process of training and the influence on clinical
skills. Iterative thematic analysis and data triangulation occurred.
Results
Response
rate was 91% (survey), 50% (focus group) and 25% (follow-up). Five
major findings emerged. Students perceive that they: develop and improve
specific communication skills; enhance their capacity to collaborate,
empathize, and be patient-centered; develop personally and
professionally through reflection. They report that the pedagogical
approach used in narrative training is critical to its dividends but
misunderstood and perceived as counter-culture.
Conclusion/Practice implications
Participating
medical students reported that they perceived narrative medicine to be
an important, effective, but counter-culture means of enhancing
communication, collaboration, and professional development. The authors
contend that these skills are integral to medical practice, consistent
with core competencies mandated by the ACGME/RCPSC, and difficult to
teach. Future research must explore sequelae of training on actual
clinical performance.
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